UHZ1 and the other three most distant quasars observed: possible evidence for Supermassive Dark Stars

Abstract

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has recently uncovered a new record-breaking quasar, UHZ1, at a redshift of z10. This discovery continues JWST's trend of confronting the expectations from the standard model of cosmology with challenges. Namely, too many very massive galaxies and quasars have been observed at very high redshifts, when the universe was only a few hundred million years old. We have previously shown that Supermassive Dark Stars (SMDSs) may offer a solution to this puzzle. These fascinating objects would be the first stars in the universe, growing to be 105-107 M and shining as bright as 109 suns. Unlike Population III stars (the major alternative proposed model for the first stars in the universe, which would also have zero metallicity and would be powered by nuclear fusion), SMDSs would be powered by dark matter heating (e.g. dark matter annihilation) and would be comparatively cooler. At the ends of their lives (when they run out of dark matter fuel), SMDSs would directly collapse into black holes, thus providing possible seeds for the first quasars. Previous papers have shown that to form at z10, UHZ1 would require an incredibly massive seed ( 104 -105 M), which was assumed to be a Direct Collapse Black Hole (DCBH). In this paper, we demonstrate that Supermassive Dark Stars (SMDSs) offer an equally valid solution to the mystery of the first quasars, by examining the four most distant known quasars: UHZ1, J0313-1806, J1342+0928, and J1007+2115, with particular emphasis on UHZ1.

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